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Nanotech looms large for meds

Author: JT Smith

Wired: “Researchers have designed nano-scale tools so small they can chew up or explode bio-warfare agents on the molecular level, or
make a single molecule glow so brightly that you can see it with only the help of a microscope.

How small can it go? Ten to the negative 9th meter. To compare, the sun is 10 to the 10th meter away from earth.”

Category:

  • Linux

Extracting text with “strings”

Author: JT Smith

An anonymous reader writes: “The Linux tools I write about here each week don’t usually care what kind of data they’re used on. Binary, ascii, Unicode, it’s all just bytes to Linux and the commands. But there are times when it makes a difference to you what kind of data is in a file. If you’re specifically looking for printable data in a mostly binary file, the command to use is “strings.” Read the full tip at LinuxLookup.

Qt ported to Mac OS 9/X, BeOS

Author: JT Smith

Trolltech: “Trolltech is demonstrating a preview release of Qt/Mac (the Mac OS X-port of Qt, Trolltech’s
emerging-standard cross-platform C++ GUI application development framework) at Apple’s World Wide
Developer Conference, May 21 through 25 at the San Jose Convention Center.”

Attrition.org throws in the towel

Author: JT Smith

Yahoo: “After five years of keeping tabs on digital graffiti, security resource site Attrition.org will no longer update its archive of Web pages defaced by vandals. It just can’t keep up.”

Category:

  • Linux

Magnets, megamarts, Microsoft and Mundie

Author: JT Smith

OSOpinion’s Kelly McNeill sent us this link: “Despite Mundie’s attempts to cloud the issue, the whole soapbox scandal really isn’t that hard to understand when put in relative terms. Things might be more easily understood when comparing it to what many have termed the Mega-Mart Menace. When one of these big “We do it all and we do it cheap” stores moves into town, local merchants try to block it, fearing for the cozy little businesses that they’ve built into a local monopoly. This Mundie thing is a little different, as this time, it’s Mega-Mart complaining about Mom-and-Pop shops.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Looking ahead with handheld developer Robert van der Meulen

Author: JT Smith

By Julie Bresnick

Open Source people

Netherlands born Robert van
der Meulen
does all his development for handhelds on a Yopy because it was the first
handheld to ship to developers with Linux pre-installed. Unsatisfied, however, with
G.Mate‘s Yopy development page he
started and now maintains the unofficial Yopy
developers site
in his free time.

He also is responsible for bzimage.org, contributes to the Debian
project, and works full time as a network/system operator, programmer and
“security guy” for a small Dutch company called Linux
Generation
. With all that involvement it’s no wonder he made it very
clear that there were no computers involved with his favorite vacation ever — three weeks biking through Ireland.

Not that you need a lot of vacations when you love what you do so
much that you do it in your free time. It’s just that when you finally take
one, it needs to be literal. It’s a personal imperative that he love what
he does, and when he talks about work he uses words like “cool,” “fun,”
“playing.” The other benefit about loving what you do is that you are
motivated by more than the almighty buck.

“The money can be good in IT but the highest priority is that I’m
having fun in what I do. I don’t have to drag myself to work. The money is not that important, as long as I can keep my music/gadget habits up, and
don’t have to worry about the rent and dinner.”

Van der Meulen started computing by playing Tetris, Frogger, and Space Invaders on a Commodore around 1983. He was 8 years old. He got bored loading the
games from tape so he used the accompanying manual to teach himself Basic,
and eventually, before going off to study computer
science/telematics
at Utrecht, turned to Linux because the limitations of DOS started getting on his
nerves. Now, besides the bread-and-butter work of Web hosting and
custom software development that they do at Linux Generation, van der Meulen
is working, in addition to the handheld development, “on an embedded Linux
system that can be used for lots of stuff ‘in your home’ — from
controlling your coffeemaker to your audio/video and alarm systems — ‘house
automation’ stuff.” Linux Generation is also toying with a Linux-based car stereo, and a
Linux set-top box.

He chooses Linux for handhelds because it’s open, which he believes
all software should be, and because it’s flexible.

“The great thing about Linux, when you spread it over multiple
hardware architectures, is that it’s mostly the same. Development is
straightforward and platform-independent, testing cycles are short, and portability is
huge. On handhelds, you have the advantage of ‘running a mini Linux system’ —
putting it next to your desktop, in your pocket, allowing for easy
interoperation between the two — as they run the same software. Next to
that, there’s the gigantic pool of software readily available — most of
it needs minor tweaking, almost all of it is reusable in part.”

Disadvantages?

“You’re running a desktop operating system on a handheld, so you
need to make decisions about size. In handhelds, adding memory gets lots more
expensive, fast … And to a lesser extent, speed. I use a
Yopy for handheld development, and I need to cram a Linux kernel, the
base system, an X server, and my applications into 16Mb of flash memory, and
it would be cool to have some space for saving data as well. Speed is an
issue, because everything you do on a handheld should be ‘snappy;’ you tap
something, and you want to see the result immediately.”

It’s an immediacy that van der Meulen, who describes himself as
chaotic, craves on more than just his handheld. He’s a city guy, he likes being
buoyed by the city’s constant bustle. He likes easy access to urban culture.

Growing up in a small village just outside Deventer, Netherlands, van der Meulen spent his indoor time investigating the innards of
everything electronic and his outdoor time cultivating a taste for urban living.
Now, at 25 and living with some former co-workers in Utrecht, he
does pretty much the same thing. At home he’s usually behind his computer,
maybe reading a science fiction or cyberpunk novel or taking apart a new
gadget, and when he’s out he likes to visit museums, the cinema, meet friends
at a bar or restaurant, always with a few CDs and a player on hand.

It’s this artistic side that, if anything, competed with computing
for his professional attention. Raised in a household with a technically
inclined father and a mother who loved to paint, van der Meulen worried
that working in the IT field would lack the creativity he craved. In a
rather adept compromise he has managed to carve out an atmosphere in which he
can be most creative while doing the development he loves.

“After finishing school (or actually my motivation for dropping out)
I started to work with an Internet provider called Cistron, doing various
stuff — mostly development/security work, and some project management.
Then Cistron got bigger, became too much of a ‘company’ for my taste —
Cistron’s owner and CEO thought much the same, left, and started Linux
Generation. I joined him. We started out with the two of us, and are a
three-person company now — keeping it small, non-corporate, with a lot
of space for experiments, fun things, and playing with technology.”

A truly well-rounded personality, when he’s not just using his
left-brain to write code or his right-brain to look at paintings he’s using both
at a local climbing gym or power kiting
at the beach.

With all this good time, it’s a wonder that he’s not more
sentimental, prone to lingering in the past, milking events by telling stories or
reflecting on memories. Instead, he reckons that he spends more time
thinking forward. Right now, he’s looking forward to his first
cross-Atlantic expedition (he’ll be co-hosting, with Wichert Akkerman,
a tutorial on development for the Debian distribution at the upcoming
LinuxWorld in San Francisco), and also to real broadband connections, applications
that “actually use it,” and the integration of connectivity “in lots of
different stuff.”

About Robert van der Meulen

Favorite book: Cryptonomicon, by Neal Stephenson

Favorite music: “I mostly listen to alternative music/metal like Type O
Negative, PJ Harvey, Nine Inch Nails, Marilyn Manson, Nick Cave, but
some drum and bass as well — Aphrodite, Chemical Brothers …”

Favorite artist: Salvador
Dali
.

Video game: “The Final Fantasy series on Playstation, and the Monkey
Island series. I really can’t pick between them.”

Movie: Stigmata and La Cite des Enfents Perdu
(The City of Lost Children).

Linux Distribution: “Debian because it’s the only distribution that has
a high ‘freedom’ standard, and I love the way the management works (updating, maintaining, manageability). There’s also huge amount of software, compliance to as much standards as possible, and (if you run ‘unstable’) you can keep running the latest
version of almost everything without having to keep track of changes in
the software.”

IBM ups the hard-drive capacity ante

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that IBM has released a modified form of data storage on their hard drives, which they call antiferromagnetically coupled media (AFC), but have given the rest of us the term “pixie dust” to refer to it. They are expecting to reach 400GB desktop hard drives with AFC.

Category:

  • Unix

Microsoft denies anti-competitive charges in Brazil

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Microsoft can add Brazil to the list of countries upset at its anti-competitive practices, though Microsoft denies the charges.

Apple scraps cathode ray tube, ships all Macs with OS X

Author: JT Smith

PC World reports that Apple is going to ship all new Macintosh systems with Mac OS X, and will be replacing cathode ray tubes (CRT) with liquid crystal displays (LCD).

Category:

  • Linux

Dumb Devices in a New & Networked Web World

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes “There’s a lot of talk about Web-enabling devices, but not much about actually connecting these devices to the Internet. At the Internet Explorer 5 launch, Bill Gates said, “We need to Web-enable not just the PC, but other devices.” There are a couple of problems to be overcome in Web-enabling devices. The first is that most of the devices targeted do not have Internet communications capability already incorporated in their operating systems. In fact, many don’t even have an electronic controller let alone an operating system.